Publications by authors named "M N Gambirasio"

Background And Objective: Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a clinical condition associated with higher rates of overall and cardiovascular mortality. There is scarce evidence regarding the impact of MetS on surgical and functional outcomes for patients undergoing partial nephrectomy (PN) for clinically localized small renal masses (SRMs).

Methods: We analyzed data from a prospectively maintained institutional database for 690 patients with cT1a renal cancer undergoing PN between 2000 and 2023 at a tertiary referral center.

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The rapid spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus has forced healthcare organizations to change their organization, introducing new ways of working, relating, communicating, and managing to cope with the growing number of hospitalized patients. Starting from the analysis of the narratives of healthcare workers who served in the intensive care units of 10 hospitals in Central and Northern Italy, this contribution intends to highlight elements present during the pandemic period within the investigated structures, which are considered factors that can influence the birth of organizational learning. Specifically, the data collected through interviews and focus groups were analyzed using the framework analysis method of Ritchie and Spencer.

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The surveillance of a vascular access (VA) is of primary importance for its outcome and for the patients' survival. However, there is still confusion about its usefulness, who should make it (physician or nurse) and when, and what is the best functional test to use. This retrospective analysis reports our experience of VA monitoring; it is based on the collaboration between concept doctors and nurses and on parameters integration, realized with the help of a software for vascular access monitoring (SMAV) designed by us.

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Covid-19 is a disease caused by a new coronavirus presenting a variability of flu-like symptoms including fever, cough, myalgia and fatigue; in severe cases, patients develop pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, sepsis and septic shock, that can result in their death. This infection, which was declared a global epidemic by the World Health Organization, is particularly dangerous for dialysis patients, as they are frail and more vulnerable to infections due to the overlap of multiple pathologies. In patients with full-blown symptoms, there is a renal impairment of various degrees in 100% of the subjects observed.

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Background: Spinal myxopapillary ependymoma (SP-MPE) is a subgroup of ependymomas in which after initial gross tumor resection, recurrences occur in more than half of the patients. Anaplastic transformation may also occur and contributes to intraneural and extraneural metastatic dissemination. Extraneural metastases from SP-MPE are rare and worsen the prognosis.

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